Digital Music Blog

Digital Music gives your business the competitive edge by providing a pleasant atmosphere for customers. The background music can be used in public or private areas

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Music therapy for reducing surgical anxiety

Sounds are part of people's everyday lives, and they bring forth many different psychological and emotional responses. The shriek of a police siren might induce surprise or fear; a baby's wail might provoke edginess and irritation; and music on the radio might stimulate joy, happiness or even dancing. Music in particular affects people deeply in many different ways.

Studies have established that the use of music can be an effective technique in the clinical area due to its ability to distract patients from their pain and muffle the many sounds e.g. monitors, or alarms of a normal busy hospital. Researchers have confirmed that music that promotes relaxation can provide a noninvasive method of decreasing patients' anxiety and improving their emotional state. One study investigated listening to music as a method of reducing patients' anxiety during minor surgery with local anesthesia. The results showed that patients who listened to their choice of music during surgery experienced significantly lower anxiety levels, heart rates, and blood pressure than patients who did not listen to music.

Recent research has looked at physiological responses associated with musical stimuli. One study that investigated event-driven skin conductance responses to musical emotions in humans demonstrated that music was a powerful elicitor of emotion and might induce autonomic nervous system response. Emotional arousal caused by music in that study evoked and modulated skin or conductance responses. Researchers also found that music can help reduce pain. For example, patients who listened to music and controlled their own pain with analgesia after gynecologic surgery experienced less pain than patients who only administered their own analgesia.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

The positive power of music

Music has its own special magic attached to it. It can make you dance, sing , smile or cry. It calms , relaxes,manages stress, gives inner peace and comforts many, and once someone said it even has the ability to sooth even a savage beast. One of the major uses of music is its application in music therapy. In music therapy, music is used to address physical needs such as aerobics, emotional needs such as relaxation,cognitive, and social needs of people from all walks of life as well as all ages.

Music has the ability of touching people beyond mere words. Even before we are born, we are exposed to a heartbeat and the wonderful liquid sounds in the womb, and therefore babies are conditioned to music before they are even born. Music does have a way of taking what we think or feel and give it a voice. This is one of the most effective ways that music helps in the healing process. Instead of keeping what you're thinking and struggling and being challenged by inside and it having its internal struggle, it can be put into words that are sung. Music also does help those with speech impediments such as stuttering.

Due to the predictability in the rhythm of the music, its pretty easy to know what it's going to take rhythmically to sing and your brain adjusts in that way and is able to accommodate the lyrical, melodic and rhythmic flow of the music because your brain can predict what is going to happen. Music has a vast variety of ways in which it demonstrates positive power, it has the power to uplift us, give us inner peace, manage our stress, relax us, help us meditate and has the power to inspire us. All in all, music has the power to communicate to the soul in ways that words alone can not.

Dr Julie Trudeau invites you to enjoy her online music natural health products to JOIN her love affair with the phi harmonic vibrations of the Music of the Spheres. Buy digital Music created by her and enjoy life! For more details about digital music visit Dr. Julie

Monday, July 03, 2006

Music Therapy Helps Sick Babies

Researchers found that music therapy helps sick babies in intensive care in maintaining normal behavioral development, making them less irritable, upset and less likely to cry. Research on 40 infants, divided into three groups: those hospitalised and receiving music therapy; those hospitalised and not having music therapy; and healthy babies, cared for at home, without music therapy. The hospitalised infants who received music therapy had up to 12 sessions of the therapist gently singing to them and touching them in a way that directly related to the therapist's perception of the social needs of the babies.

It was found that music therapy supported the infants' behavior - these infants maintained the same levels of irritability and crying that they had at admission.Meanwhile, those babies who did not have music therapy deteriorated in their irritability and crying behavior - coping less with their hospitalization as time went on. The babies who received music therapy used up less energy compared with the babies who did not receive the therapy. If a baby is less irritable and cries less, this has implications for rate of healing and weight gain, two significant factors which contribute to the length of a hospital stay.

Music has the ability to repair and encourage health and harmony to an extent that there is an entire field called music therapy. Studies have shown that music therapy is effective in relieving anxiety and stress, promoting relaxation and treating depression. Music therapy allows people with emotional problems to explore feelings, make positive changes in mood, practice problem solving, and resolve conflicts. It has been used successfully by mental health institutions during group therapy sessions.

The healing effects of music therapy are not only limited to mental health but also patients with burns, heart disease, diabetes and cancer. Music therapy strengthens communication and physical coordination skills, as it improves the physical and mental functioning of those with neurological disabilities or developmental disorders. Those with learning, speech and hearing problems may also find music therapy helpful.

Music therapy reduces the need for medication during childbirth and complements the use of anesthesia during surgery and dental work, especially when children undergo medical and surgical procedures. It is useful in newborn care of premature infants. Aside from these acute situations, music therapy helps ease chronic pain.

Music therapy improves the quality of life for terminally ill patients and enhances the well-being of the elderly, including those suffering from Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia. It has been used to complement the treatment of AIDS, stroke, Parkinson's and cancer. At the same time, music therapy is useful in the support of the families and caregivers of such patients.

Music therapy can be as involving or as simple as the situation warrants. The main thing is just to get started. Practicing music therapy may well be the way to start your own healing and peaceful revolution!For more details about Music Therapy visit Dr. Julie

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Music: An Essential for Relaxation

Music is said to be a universal language that is capable of uniting people irrespective of their color, language, race or religion. It’s also well-known that Music promotes relaxation, relieves anxiety and stress, and treats depression. Music also improves the physical and mental functioning. It also crosses the boundaries of hospitals and research facilities. Relaxation Music has endless benefits that are therapeutic in nature and useful to many people around the world and it’s available online. The following are some of the most important:*It relieves you from job related stress, strain and fatigue at your work place. *It helps you relieve yourself from anxiety. *It helps the pregnant ladies to remain calm during their pregnancy period and it’s also a Stress management technique which prevents the passing of stress and strain to their babies. *It reduces the chances of getting Hypertension. *It helps you to enhance learning, improve social skills. *It helps you to improve emotional well-being in healthy children and adults. *It also helps in recovering from brain injury. *It helps patients suffering from disabilities such as mental health needs developmental disabilities, learning disabilities, Alzheimer’s disease, aging related conditions, substance abuse, physical disabilities, Acute or chronic pain. Relaxation Music, for example Inner Peace Music, slows down the heart rate, slows down the breathing, and slows your thinking, enabling you to reach really deep levels of rest and peace. Here are some excerpts from various studies about music and its effect on our lives.Adults who listen regularly to Meditation Music reported feeling less fatigue and depression after just six weeks of regular listening. And their levels of cortical, a stress hormone in the blood, dropped significantly. Further, this effect lasted for seven weeks after the listening study ended. According to some studies, gentle, slow, relaxing, soothing music has a stunningly positive impact on learning, creativity, and memory. Doctors use soothing music in the neonatal unit to calm premature babies. This allows all their energy to be used for growing and not be wasted on fretting and crying. The records there show that babies who have listened to soothing music are often discharged days earlier than others who have not had the benefit of music. Dr Julie Trudeau invites you to enjoy her online music, natural health products and her love affair with the philharmonic vibrations of the Music of the Spheres. Buy digital Music created by her and enjoy the difference. For more details of relaxation music visit Dr.Julie

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

The Different Levels of Music Therapy

Music therapy is always a two-way process. This is why tape recordings are no substitute for the human contact of the music therapist, even though they often can provide some measure of comfort or relaxation. Music therapy goes beyond comfort to become active communication. The music is always more than just notes that are played or the words that are sung, it is a bond of intimacy between the therapist and the patients. The music therapist carefully chooses music suited to each individual situation, on a number of simultaneous levels:

1.Cultural: Music from the patient's own cultural or ethnic background gives the patient a sense of familiar surroundings, decreasing feelings of isolation and "institutional depression." A music therapist must therefore be familiar with music from many different cultures.

2.Emotional: Music is selected to show recognition of emotions the patient is experiencing. For example, if the patient is sad, do I sing a sad song to let the patient know I understand, or a happy song to help the patient feel better? For example, sometimes going right to a happy song only helps patients (and more often, family members) avoid dealing with difficult feelings. Other times, however, it can meet a genuine need for relief from grief or depression.

3.Psychological: Emotional issues not only depend on what the patient feels, but also with the patient's relationship with others. Patients may experience a whole range of reactions, including feelings of isolation, depression over the prospect of death or the loss of independence and control, guilt over failing to meet familial responsibilities, anger at self or at others. Any of these issues can be expressed and dealt with through music, which may be less threatening to the patient than trying to discuss them directly.

4.Spiritual: Music is often used by therapists to strengthen a patient's faith or help patients find and strengthen their inner resources. no traditional religious background. At this level music therapy becomes a form of pastoral care. Sometimes I work more with the family members than with the identified patient. I work on several different levels at once, singing to the patient a song whose real intent is to help heal the anxiety of the family members who are present. Or I may just play directly for the family member, to offer some relief from stress. Sometimes the object of music therapy is the room itself. The air in the room can become filled with the fears and tensions of patients and visitors. There is no "all-purpose" music for this. I sang some hymns from their church, which they all knew, which united their spirits, and which allowed them to perceive the patient's wordless gestures of response.

Sometimes music therapy brings families together and often goes where words no longer reach. Music is a direct communication between the patient and the therapist, even when words are useless. The deepest level on which music therapy works is the spiritual. For those who identify this meaning with God, there is plenty of online digital religious music which can be downloaded to meet an individuals needs. To know more about music visit Dr.Julie.

About Me

A native of Kankakee,
Illinois, in 1984, Dr. Julie Trudeau graduated from the Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport, Iowa in America, at the age of 22, and has been a licensed natural health care provider in Australia since 1985. She is the author & recording artist, in the audio presentations -The Golden Keys to the Money Tree - the electromagnetic tree of Life, the inner wealth of inner health & Special Secrets in Being an Oasis of Wellbeing describing her specialized services, philosophies & scientific basis as well as relating the concepts of cellular regeneration & advocating personal health responsibility, her contemporary love poetry music with the PDF e-book, The Hand of Faith - love poetry & inspirational prayer and the 12 part series The Sonic Spectrum Attunements.